Month: February 2017

LSE Behavioural Science Conference

From: Shrestha-Carney,T (ug)
Sent: 27 February 2017 10:27

Dear All,

The LSESU Behavioural Science Society invites you to:

LSE’s Annual Behavioural Science Conference

08 March 2017

Time: 4pm – 9pm

Venue: CLM 6.02 (Clement House, LSE)

Get your tickets here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/lses-annual-behavioural-science-conference-tickets-32347829228

The event will focus on how behavioural science can be applied at both a public policy-making and personal level to help people achieve success, happiness and wellbeing.

Take some time off from your busy schedule to join us at this FREE event and discover more about what values motivate you.

Speakers
– Dr. Christian Busch, founder of Thousand Network and Leaders on Purpose

LSE PhD Student Round Table
– Paulius Yamin (Department of Psychological and Behavioural Science)
– Stefano Testoni (Department of Social Policy)
– Joel Suss (Department of Social Policy)

– Workshop by World Value Initiative

**Refreshments will be provided**

We look forward to seeing you on March 8th!

Political Risk Symposium (PRIS & PPE) LSE 2017

We would like to cordially invite your students to the LSE’s Political Risk and Investment Society (PRIS), Politics, Philosophy and Economics (PPE) Society, and the Funk Foundation’s Risks from a European Perspective: A Comprehensive Approach, a conference that will discuss and debate critical issues facing the European continent.

The symposium will take place over the course of a day and comprises three panel discussions on Economic Risks for Europe, Cyber-Security, and Supply Chain Risks, in addition to opening and closing speeches. Entry is free and includes lunch and beverages throughout the day.

Speakers include:

– Mr. Marco Buti, Director- General for Economic and Financial Affairs at the European Commission

– Sir Vince Cable, Secretary of State for Business, Innovation, and Skills.

– Professor Berglof, former Chief Economist and Special Advisor to the President of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development

– General Sir Richard Barrons, former Commander Joint Forces Command

– Carl Moore, Head of Global Technology and Cyber at Lockton

Alongside academic discussion, the day itself will provide an excellent chance to network with heads of industry, academics, risk practitioners, statespeople, and economic actors. Indeed, our aim is to foster discussion of the political and economic risks caused by the above issues, allowing individuals to engage with an industry that has vastly grown in importance over recent years.

Whilst motivated undergraduates are more than welcome, the focus of the conference will be more suited to postgraduates and academics at your institution. We ask that those applying submit a short 150-word motivational statement using the application form on our website, which opened on the 20th of February.

I would like to highlight the below links for your attention. Aside from a Facebook event, we are running a website, mailing list and twitter feed to ensure that those interested remain up to date with new speakers and other developments.

The conference will be hosted at the Royal College of Surgeons, 35-43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PE and is scheduled for March 21st, 2017.

We do hope that we will have the pleasure of welcoming you to our conference.

If you have any further questions or queries, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Yours Sincerely,

Angus Watson

Please find the links below for your convenience:

Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/events/242244746218136/

Twitter: @LSE_SU_PRIS

Event page: http://www.prsymposium.com/

Workshop on Artificial Intelligence, Decision Theory and Severe Uncertainty

On March 17, a workshop on artificial intelligence, decision theory and severe uncertainty will be running at the University of Cambridge, with the following talks planned:

1. Richard Bradley (LSE) – Deciding with Confidence 2. Huw Price and Yang Liu (Cambridge/CSER) – Heart of DARCness 3. Arif Ahmed (Cambridge) – Rationality and Future Discounting 4. Catrin Campbell-Moore (Bristol) – Risk Avoidance Can’t be Accurate 5. Bernhard Salow (Cambridge) – TBC

The workshop will run from the Old Combination Room, at Trinity College.
We will gather at 9 and the workshop will run until shortly after 5 (to be followed by drinks and then dinner).

Morning coffee, lunch and afternoon snacks will be provided for those who RSVP by the end of February (to atb39@cam.ac.uk) but people are welcome to attend even if they don’t RSVP by that date. However, if you wish to attend the workshop dinner (which will be at the attendees own cost), please do let me know so that I can make the appropriate reservations.

This workshop is funded by the Cambridge Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (http://cser.org/) and the School of Arts and Humanities at the University of Cambridge.

Please do feel free to drop me an email if you have any questions: atb39@cam.ac.uk

Best,

Adam

Lea Ypi at the Aristotelian Society, Monday 20 February

Upcoming Talk at the Aristotelian Society Email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
The Aristotelian Society

The Proceedings of

the Aristotelian Society

2016-2017 | Volume CXVII | Issue No. 2

Upcoming Talk

Monday, 20 February 2017 | 17.30 – 19.15

‘The Unity of Nature and the Unity of Reason:
Revisiting Kant’s Argument on Systematicity’
Lea Ypi (LSE)

The Woburn Suite
Senate House
University of London
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU
United Kingdom

Chaired by Tim Crane (Cambridge),
President of the Aristotelian Society

View the draft paper | View the 2016/17 Programme

ABOUT

Lea Ypi is Professor of Political Theory at the London School of Economics and Political Science and Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at the Australian National University. She is the author of Global Justice and Avant-Garde Political Agency (Oxford University Press 2012) and, with Jonathan White, The Meaning of Partisanship (Oxford University Press, 2016). She has edited Migration in Political Theory (OUP 2016, with Sarah Fine) and Kant and Colonialism (OUP 2015, with Katrin Flikschuh). She is currently writing a book on “Teleology and System in Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason” (under contract with Oxford University Press).

FURTHER INFO

Join us for dinner with the speaker after the talk! All are welcome and there are a small number of subsidized places available for graduate students and members of the Society. Please register for dinner by emailing the Editor, Guy Longworth (G.H.Longworth), by the end of the week.

For further information, please visit our website.

Become a Mentor to Off Campus Students in the 2017/18 academic year

Do you want to improve your communication and interpersonal skills? Do you want to give back to the LSE community and have your contribution recognised in your Personal Development Aide Memoir (PDAM)? Why not think about applying to become a mentor to off campus students for the 2017/18 academic year?

Mentors act as a friendly human signpost to help new students not living in halls of residence. The aim is to help new students get settled at LSE as quickly as possible. Mentors use their own experience of LSE to provide reassurance to new students and answer any questions they might have. It’s not particularly time intensive, but Mentors have the opportunity to make a real difference to the arrival experience of new students. Training is provided and support is available to Mentors throughout the year.

All continuing undergraduate students are eligible to apply. You don’t need to have lived off campus yourself – just have an understanding of the unique challenges that students who do might face. Find out more about the scheme and complete a short application at lse.ac.uk/offCampusSupportScheme. Shortlisted applicants will be given the opportunity to attend a compulsory training and selection session on either Tuesday 14, Wednesday 15 or Thursday 16 March 2017.

The application deadline is 23:59 on Wednesday 22 February 2017. If you have any questions about the scheme, please email Lydia Halls at OffCampusSupport.

Summer School Critical Theory 2017

INTERNATIONAL SUMMER SCHOOL CRITICAL THEORY

Starting from summer 2017, we at the Humboldt University Berlin will organize a yearly international summer school in collaboration with the Frankfurt Institute for Social Research.

Each of these summer schools will take up a topic which is central to Critical Theory, politically relevant and systematically promising. In addressing its themes, the summer school confronts the approaches specific to a Critical Theory of society in the Frankfurt School tradition with conceptually and methodologically different perspectives.

The format mixes elements of workshops with text-based, advanced seminars. Over the course of at least one week, young researchers, graduate students and senior scholars will jointly discuss new systematic perspectives and “classic” texts from the Critical Theory corpus. A series of public round-tables will channel and sharpen the preceding exchange.

So far, the following topics are in preparation:

– Progress, Regression and Social Change(July 2017)

– Ideology and Critique (July 2018)

– Social Unreason: Crises and Pathologies (2019)

– Critical Theories of Gender (Summer 2020)

– Social Theory and Political Economy (Summer 2021)

CALL FOR PAPERS: INTERNATIONAL SUMMER SCHOOL CRITICAL THEORY 2017

IN BERLIN (JULY 17TH TO JULY 21ST)

PROGRESS, REGRESSION, AND SOCIAL CHANGE

Is there such a thing as moral or social progress? How do we understand phenomena that might be seen as instances of social regression? And how, after all, are we to conceptualize social change?

While some Critical Theorists hold that we need a notion of progressive social change (and its counterpart) in order to understand and evaluate the dynamics of the transformations we undergo, the very notion of progress (as it is entrenched in the self-understanding of western modernity) seems to be ambivalent and is strongly contested.

So, while it is not easy to see how progress – as a certain kind of “learning process” that has played a central role in Critical Theory from its very beginning – could be dispensed with, our understanding of it certainly needs to be reconstructed.

It is not only the normative question in the narrower sense, though, that is at stake here. By asking how we can possibly conceive of social transformations as “change for the better”, we are not only addressing the issue of normative standards for evaluation of “the good society”. If we want to rely on immanent rather than freestanding normative standards, we also have to re-investigate our concepts of history and social transformation. That means: we should take seriously the notion that “progress” as well as “regression” are bound up with some account of social change as a result of the erosion of institutions and social practices that have been outlived or de-legitimized. Whether this amounts to an accumulative process, as the terms “regression” and “progress” seem to suggest, is one of a variety of questions that we mean to address at our summer school.

To apply for participation, graduate students and junior scholars are invited to submit short essays (3-5pages) representing their research interests which focus on the following themes or questions:

  • Philosophies of history/dialectics (Hegel/Kant)
  • Theories of revolution and social change (f.i. Historical Materialism)
  • Progress and regression (Benjamin and Adorno, Foucault)
  • Moral and institutional progress (as in Honneth, Anderson, Appiah)
  • Naturalist accounts of progress and accounts of social evolution (f.i. Kitcher, Habermas)

Deadline for submissions: March 15th 2017, please email to: summerschool.CT

We do not take fees, but participants have to cover and organize their own travel and accommodation.

Organizers: Rahel Jaeggi, Eva von Redecker, Isette Schuhmacher (Humboldt University Berlin) in cooperation with the Frankfurt Institute for Social Research and the New School for Social Research (Alice Crary)

Participants (amongst others): Amy Allen, Jay Bernstein, Hauke Brunkhorst, Axel Honneth, Rahel Jaeggi, Terry Pinkard, Allessandro Pinzani.

Please note that LSE neither endorses nor accepts any liability for the information, arrangement, promotion and delivery of any external events or academic programmes contained in this message. You are advised to conduct your own checks on the accuracy of any information and raise any concerns with the third party supplier.

Enactus LSE Case Olympics

This year, we are proud to work with LSE Generate on the inaugural Enactus LSE Case Olympics – a case competition with a social twist centred on sustainability. Registration for the competition is now opened and will close on 13 February. On 14 February, three problems will be presented and over the course of two weeks, participants will be tasked to come up with an entrepreneurial solution centred around sustainability. This will be in the form of a pitch deck but workshops and help sessions will be held in that period to support each participant in this learning journey. Do note that workshop slots are limited and allocated on a rolling basis.

The pitch decks will then be reviewed and the top five submissions will get to pitch their solutions to a panel of judges from key industries at the final round held on 11 March. Other participants will also get a chance to interact with business representatives from these firms at the networking event thereafter.

PRIZES: The winning teams will earn a fast-track opportunity with our partner firms, including a £500 worth of business strategy training with PA Consulting, coffee chats with senior managers from Accenture and many more.

If you are interested in participating in this event, please register (as an individual or as a team) and pay, following the instructions in the link below by 13 February 2017, 11.59pm:

Sign-up form for Enactus Case Olympics

form.jotformeu.com

Please click the link to complete this form.

Be sure to also check out our Facebook page as we will post information about the judges and prizes of the competition regularly there:

Enactus LSE Case Olympics 2017 | Facebook

www.facebook.com

Enactus LSE Case Olympics 2017. 110 likes · 80 talking about this. Enactus LSE is a school-based society that is part of the non-profit organization…

Enactus LSE Case Olympics Committee 2017

I hope to hear from you soon and thank you for your help in this.

Best regards,

Frances Li

Invitation to PBS Public Lecture – The Moral Economy: why good incentives are no substitute for good citizens – Professor Sam Bowles, Thursday 23 February 2017, 6.30pm – 8.00pm in the Old Theatre, LSE

– The Moral Economy: why good incentives are no substitute for good citizens –

Professor Sam Bowles,Thursday 23 February 2017, 6.30pm – 8.00pm in the Old Theatre, LSE

Abstract

Why do policies and business practices that ignore the moral and generous side of human nature often fail? Should the idea of economic man-the amoral and self-interested Homo economicus-determine how we expect people to respond to monetary rewards, punishments, and other incentives? Samuel Bowles answers with a resounding "no." Policies that follow from this paradigm, he shows, may "crowd out" ethical and generous motives and thus backfire. But incentives per se are not really the culprit. Bowles shows that crowding out occurs when the message conveyed by fines and rewards is that self-interest is expected, that the employer thinks the workforce is lazy, or that the citizen cannot otherwise be trusted to contribute to the public good. Using historical and recent case studies as well as behavioral experiments, Bowles shows how well-designed incentives can crowd in the civic motives on which good governance depends.

Speaker Biography

Sam Bowles (PhD, Economics, Harvard University) is Research Professor at the Santa Fe Institute where he heads the Behavioral Sciences Program. He taught economics at Harvard from 1965 to 1973 and since then at the University of Massachusetts, where he is now emeritus professor and at the University of Siena from 2002 to 2010 where he continues to occasionally teach. His scholarly papers have appeared in Science, Nature, New Scientist, American Economic Review, Theoretical Population Biology, Games and Economic Behavior, Journal of Theoretical Biology, Journal of Political Economy, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Behavioral and Brain Science, Philosophy and Public Affairs, Journal of Public Economics, Theoretical Primatology, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA), Harvard Business Review, Journal of Economic Literature, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Current Anthropology, and the Economic Journal. He has also served as an economic advisor to the governments of Cuba, South Africa and Greece, to U.S presidential candidates Robert F. Kennedy and Jesse Jackson, to the Legislature of the State of New Mexico, to the Congress of South African Trade Unions, and to South African President Nelson Mandela.

Please find more information at:

http://www.lse.ac.uk/Events/2017/02/20170223t1830vOT/The-Moral-Economy

This event is free and open to all with no ticket or pre-registration required. Entry is on a first come, first served basis.